Abstract

Myoglobin was immobilized with poly(methyl methacrylate)-block-poly[(2-dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate]PMMA-block-PDMAEMA polymer synthesized by reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer technique (RAFT). Cyclic voltammograms gave direct and slow quasireversible heterogeneous electron transfer kinetics between Mb-PMMA-block-PDMAEMA modified electrode and the redox center of the protein. The values for electron rate constant () and transfer coefficient () were ·s−1 and , respectively. The reduction potential determined as a function of temperature (293–328 K) revealed a value of reaction center entropy of of  J·mol−1·K−1 and enthalpy change of  kJ·mol−1, suggesting solvent effects and charge ionization atmosphere involved in the reaction parallel to hydrophobic interactions with the copolymer. The immobilized protein also exhibits an electrocatalytical response to reduction of hydrogen peroxide, with an apparent Km of μM. The overall results substantiate the design and use of RAFT polymers towards the development of third-generation biosensors.

1. Introduction

Direct electron transfer of proteins on the surface of bare electrodes is known to present some trouble due to the deep buried of protein redox centers in its structure, as well as adsorptive denaturation and unfavorable orientations of the macromolecule [1]. Several efforts have been made to circumvent this problem, among which are the use of polymer as mediators [2], dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine [3], polytetrafluoroethylene [4], and poly-,-[N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-L-aspartamide] films [5]. A different approach to synthesize polymeric structures includes its controlled assembly of functional groups and molecular architectures [6]. There are several controlled/living radical polymerization (CRP) techniques, such as reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer or RAFT polymerization [7]. RAFT technique uses a chain transfer compound to attain control over the molecular weight and polydispersity during a free-radical polymerization, resulting in well-defined polymers, as well as diblock, triblock, and polymers with more complex architectures [8]. RAFT polymers have attracted considerable attention in the last decade, toward to a broad spectrum of applications including optoelectronics, block copolymer therapeutics, and star polymer rheology control agents [9]. In this regard, several derivatives of diblock RAFT polymers such as poly(methyl methacrylate)-block-poly[(2-dimethylamino) ethyl methacrylate] (PMMA-b-PDMAEMA) have been used due to their versatility, stability, and ease of processing [10]. As some RAFT polymers seem to exhibit electroactivity [11, 12], they would be also used for entrapment of macromolecules under electrochemical investigation. Keeping this in mind, the aim of this work was to investigate the redox properties of myoglobin immobilized in PMMA-block-PDMAEMA, as a feasible approach to the development of a third-generation biosensor.

2. Material and Methods

2.1. Chemicals

Horse myoglobin (Mb, MW 17,800) and methylmethacrylate, 99%, were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. 2-(dimethylamino) ethyl methacrylate (DMAEMA, 98%, Sigma-Aldrich) was used with no further purification. Benzoyl peroxide (BPO) and glutaraldehyde was obtained from Vetec Brazil and used as received. Phosphate buffer solutions were prepared by adjusting the pH values either with 0.1 M NaOH or 0.1 M HCl. All other chemical reagents were of analytical grade and all the solutions were prepared with Milli-Q water.

2.2. Copolymer Synthesis

The RAFT technique was used for the synthesis of PMMA-b-PDMAEMA copolymers. The chain transfer agent used was cumyl dithiobenzoate (CDB), previously synthesized according to a modified two-step method by Mertoglu [13]. First the synthesis of dithiobenzoic acid is carried out followed by the addition of -methylstyrene to the acid. The synthesis was started by the PMMA block, using benzoyl peroxide (BPO) as initiator. The PMMA blocks were purified by precipitation in methanol and drying in vacuum. These PMMA blocks were afterwards used as macrochain transfer agents (macroCTA) in a copolymerization using DMAEMA as monomer and BPO as initiator. The copolymers were purified by precipitation in n-hexane. Products were confirmed by 1H-NMR (INOVA DPX 300 Bruker spectrometer). All copolymers produced visually homogeneous aqueous solutions at neutral and low pHs. Precipitation occurs within the pH range of 9-10 at 25°C. Lower critical solution temperature (LCST) for all copolymers at is above 40°C.

2.3. Electrode Preparation

After electrode cleaning, 30 μL of a stock solution of PMMA-b-PDMAEMA 10 mg·mL−1 in acetone was pipetted on the electrode surface following evaporation for 4 h at room temperature. Then, 30 μL of myoglobin (Mb) at 5 mg·mL−1 was carefully dripped onto the electrode surface. After 4 h, the electrode was rinsed again to remove adsorbed protein, followed by pipetting glutaraldehyde 2% for 30 min. After washing, the electrode was rinsed with water and dried in nitrogen atmosphere prior to electrochemical experiments. When not in use, the sensor was stored in nitrogen-saturated buffer solution (pH 7.5) at room temperature in the dark.

2.4. Cyclic Voltammetry

Cyclic voltammetry (CV) was performed using a potentiostat PG39MCSV (Omni Metra Instrumentos Científicos Ltda, RJ, Brazil). A conventional three-electrode system was used with bare or modified home-made gold electrode (4 mm diameter, 99.9% purity, Sigma-Aldrich) as the working electrode, Ag/AgCl as the reference electrode, and a platinum wire as the counter electrode. Gold electrode was first polished using aqueous slurries of 10 m alumina, placed in ethanol (99.5%), and subjected to ultrasonic vibration to remove residual alumina particles. Finally, the electrode was etched for 2 min in a hot Piranha solution (1 : 3 (v/v) 30% H2O2) and concentrated H2SO4) and then rinsed with copious amounts of ultrapure Millipore water followed by ethanol washing.

2.5. Thermodynamic Assays

The temperature dependence of the reduction potential was determined with a nonisothermal cell [14] in which the reference electrode is kept at constant temperature, while the temperature of the working electrode is varied. For such an experimental setting, the values for standard entropy () and enthalpy () changes of the reaction center upon reduction wer obtained from the relation below [15]:

2.6. Electroactivity against Hydrogen Peroxide

Amperometric measurements were performed under unstirred conditions. Aliquots of standard solution of H2O2 (10–480 μmol·L−1) were added to the buffer solution. Prior to the experiments, buffer and sample solutions were purged with pure nitrogen for 10 min to remove oxygen.

2.7. Data Analysis

All of the experiments were conducted in triplicate. The data were expressed as mean standard error. Adjustments of equations to the data were performed with R (R Core Development Team) [16].

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Cyclic Voltammetry

The prosthetic group of Mb contains an iron atom in heme system, and the charge transfer of Mb is based on the ferric reduction inside this porphyrin ring system. The cyclic voltammograms for Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA modified electrode in 0.1 mol·L−1 phosphate buffer pH 7.4 can be viewed in Figure 1. A pair of well-defined, quasireversible CV redox peaks centered at about 50 and 200 mV, for cathodic and anodic wave peaks, respectively, can be observed (Figure 1(b)). The electrode modified with PMMA-block-PDMAEMA also showed a small contribution to the faradaic current in the buffer solution, which seems to persisted even with the entrapped protein. Although the proper mechanism of charge transfer between the Au surface and the modified electrode without myoglobin is not clear, the copolymer itself may have contributed to the shoulder peak presented in the CV results [17].

The ipa/ipc ratio, an index of reversibility of electron transfer, was found to be with varying scanning rates (Figure 3). Furthermore, a log-log plot of scan rates against anodic peak potentials resulted in slope value of , far from 0.5 expected from a pure diffusional process of electron transfer ().

The effect of scanning rate on the response of the Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA modified electrode is present in Figures 2 and 3. The height of reduction peak current was linearly proportional to the square root of the scan rates in the range of 20–500 mV·s−1 (), although the oxidation peak current revealed a deviation from the linear trend (). These findings suggest the characterisation of surface or thin layer electrochemistry on the electrode surface [18, 19]. The surface concentration of the electroactive protein () was further estimated following Laviron [20]: where is the Faraday constant; is the surface concentration of the electroactive substance; is the geometric area of the electrode; is the scan rate; and is the number of electrons transferred. Under the condition of saturated adsorption, the average surface coverage of electroactive Mb was about  mol·cm−2. This surface concentration changed slightly with scan rates from 1.5 to  mol·cm−2, in agreement to a surface-confined process on the modified electrode [19, 20]. This value was close to the reported elsewhere for chitosan films [21] and modified carbon nanotube electrodes [22] and greater than  cm−2 expected for a monolayer of myoglobin adsorbed onto metallic electrode surfaces [23]. In addition, the modified electrode retained 89% of its surface concentration up to 21 days.

In this sense, myoglobin molecules could be embedded in PMMA-b-PDMAEMA di-block on the modified electrode. In fact, the copolymer has a molecular mass of 66.1 kg·mol−1 [24] and hydrodynamic radius of 2,2 nm [25]), values larger than those found for Mb (17.5 kg·mol−1 [26] and 0.21 nm [27], resp.). Moreover, a linear length of 92 Å for the outstretched copolymer can be hypothesized, considering the individual molecular mass of the blocks (100.12 g·mol−1 and 157.21 g·mol−1 for MMA and DMAEMA, resp.) and their polymerization degree (5400 and 60700, resp.). In this sense, a plausible thickness for the copolymer on the electrode surface can be calculated from the value of double layer capacitance resulted following Asaka [28], (3), and (4) [29]: where e represent, respectively, the anodic and cathodic current estimated from the central part of the cyclic voltammogram (Figure 1, after baseline correction). Therefore, the thickness can be computed by where represents the double layer capacitance of the adsorbed copolymer and the electrical permittivity of free space ( F·m−1, and the dielectric constant of the copolymer (PMMA, 1.08 [30]). The capacitance was determined from the current difference between the forward and reverse scans, following (3) [28]. From (4), a thickness of 180 nm was found for the PMMA-b-PDMAEMA on the electrode surface. Even with this roughly estimated value for the diblock thickness, a multilayer structure for the copolymer coverage can be suggested [19].

Figure 2 shows that with the increase of the scan rate, the redox peak potentials were also shifted gradually. In order to obtain information on the rate-determining step, Tafel slope was determined from the relationship between versus [31], by taking the rising part of the voltammograms (Figure 2) as follows [32]:

From Tafel slope in Figure 4, the electron transfer coefficient was calculated as . According to (6) for  mV [18], the electron rate constant was found to be . Consider

Both and values agree well with a quasireversible process in Mb-modified electrode [33], but revealed a slower degree for the electron transfer rate than that reported for the entrapped protein [1, 31].

Cyclic voltammetry was also used to investigate the pH dependence of the formal potentials which were calculated from the midpoint of reduction and oxidation peak potentials for the Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA modified electrode. As the copolymers can form aggregates below pH 4.0 and solubilize in aqueous medium above pH 7.5 (isoelectric point around 8-9 [10, 34]), pH values varied from 4.5 to 7.5. The results are presented in Figure 5.

All changes in voltammogram peak potentials with pH were reversible in the range tested (pH 4.5 to 7.5). A cathodic shift in values was found with increasing pH, suggesting a decrease in dielectric constant medium and/or an ionization of the protein surface [35]. The linear relationship of with pH from 4.5 to 7.5 exhibited a slope of − pH/V. Nearly, the same slope value has been found at glassy carbon electrode modified with myoglobin entrapped with the cationic surfactant didodecyldimethylammonium [36]. These slope values can be expected for a Nernstian behavior from a charge transfer with two electrons coupled a participation of one [37]. Nevertheless, myoglobin exhibit a single proton transfer coupled to the electron transfer reaction [1, 31]. Although this finding has not yet been conclusive and needs further research, both PDMAEMA monomer [38] and didodecyldimethylammonium ion have a cationic amine positively charged at the pH assayed [34]. Hence, it can be speculated that the positively charged state of tertiary amines of the PDMAEMA can play a role on the overall electron-transfer mechanism resulting in the slope value far below than that theoretically expected.

As the pI value for Mb is known to be 6.8 [39], it is reasonable to believe the existence of an anionic atmosphere around the metallic group on the protein at the pH assayed, favouring an electrostatic interaction with the porphyrin ring system. The PMMA-block-PDMAEMA polymer has a pKa value around 8, depending on the side chain conformation [10], suggesting a positively charged state for their tertiary amines. Keeping this in mind, an electrostatic interaction could be taking place between the RAFT copolymer and the protein molecule, parallel to hydrophobic forces, enhancing the strength for the complex.

3.1.1. Redox Thermodynamics of Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA

Using the cell/electrode assembly described at the 2.5 item, voltammetric nonisothermal determination for entropy () and enthalpy () of redox process occurring on the Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA modified electrode was accomplished. The redox thermodynamics was done following Tanigushi and coworkers [14], increasing the temperature of the electrochemical cell from 293 to 328 K.

From Figure 6, a reaction center entropy change () of  J·mol−1·K−1 was calculated for the Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA. From the Gibbs-Helmholtz relationship obtained from a plot of versus (Figure 7), the enthalpy change () was − J·mol−1.

The reduction entropy appeared to be affected by solvation properties, namely, the reducing-induced reorganization of solvent molecules bound onto the protein surface near the iron center [40]. The value of for Mb is higher than that reported in aqueous solution [41]. On the other hand, the remarkable negative value for the enthalpy change indicated that the electron transfer reactions are exothermic and all the oxidized protein can approach more flexible polypeptide conformation at higher temperatures [42]. This value can be also ascribed to the stabilization of the ferroheme by ligand binding interactions and the hydrophobicity of the heme environment [35]. As a whole, this temperature dependence of the redox potential for Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA seems to reflect changes in the protein structure, together with its interactions with the solvent, with PMMA-b-PDMAEMA, or with a combination of these effects. Notwithstanding, conformational changes in the Mb structure can be discarded, as no inflection point can be observed in Figure 6 [43, 44].

3.2. Electrocatalytic Activity

Although the proper mechanism of charge transfer remains unclear in this work, a catalytic activity of Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA modified electrode was tested against the reduction of H2O2. When hydrogen peroxide was added to the buffer solution at pH 7.5, an increase in the current value for the reduction peak could be observed (Figure 8). A reference test in absence of Mb did not show any catalytic activity for H2O2. From Figure 8, an apparent value for the Michaelis-Menten behavior was determined as follows: where is the maximum current measured under saturated substrate conditions. The apparent value was found to be 114.7 ± 58.7 μM, close to the reported elsewhere for Mb-modified electrodes [31, 45], and smaller than that presented for Hb/sol-gel film modified CPE [46]. This value for also indicates that the immobilized Mb has a high biological affinity to H2O2.

3.3. Mechanism Proposed for Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA

As stated by Gohy et al. [34], PDMAEMA can be partially charged in aqueous medium in 7 < pH < 10 range, resulting in a surfactant behaviour that can lead to aggregation and micelle formation [47]. So, a hydrophobic effect can be occurring at the pH 7.4 assayed, enhancing the interaction of PMMA-b-PDMAEMA with the gold electrode surface. This hydrophobic effect may also be improved by the Mb-embedded multilayer nature of PMMA-b-PDMAEMA, as suggested above.

The tertiary structure of myoglobin is made up of seven alpha helical segments. As sequences that form surface-seeking helices have large hydrophobic dipole moments [48], it is plausible to believe that a large portion of hydrophobic area can contribute to the copolymer binding due to their benzoyl and ethylene groups, in addition to the heme binding pocket.

Moreover, the copolymer diblock has several oxygen ether groups of high electronegativity in its methyl/ethyl methacrylate moieties which could lead to an ion-dipole attraction between oppositely charged of these groups with Lys and Arg residues on the Mb surface. In fact, Mb has 19 Lys and 2 Arg residues exposed to the solvent, and with pKa values of 10–12 and 12-13, respectively [49], thus offering positively exposed charges on the protein surface. This hypothesis is in agreement with similar ion-dipole interaction reported for electrochemical adsorption systems of proteins with polyelectrolytes [50, 51]. Then, the combined electrostatic (anionic Mb/cationic copolymer), ion-dipole (Lys, Arg/oxygen ether for the copolymer), hydrophobic interactions, and hydrogen bonding between myoglobin and PMMA-b-PDMAEMA (and also the hydrophobic effect between the gold electrode surface and PMMA-b-PDMAEMA) could provide the major driven forces for the stabilization of Mb/PMMA-b-PDMAEMA at the electrode surface.

4. Conclusion

We have tested the use of a RAFT polymer for electrochemical studies of myoglobin as a model protein. As this polymerization approach for block synthesis allows very precise control over the polymerization process while retaining much of the versatility of conventional radical polimerization, newer copolymers can be reached as a function of specific goals for direct protein electrochemistry and towards the development of newer biosensors with desired specifications.

Conflict of Interests

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgment

The authors acknowledge the Minas Gerais State Research Foundation-FAPEMIG for Grant no. CBB-APQ-01920-11 that supported this work.